Identifying employee, workplace and population characteristics associated with COVID-19 outbreaks in the workplace: a population-based study

Author:

Overton Christopher EORCID,Abbey Rachel,Baird Tarrion,Christie Rachel,Daniel Owen,Day Julie,Gittins MatthewORCID,Jones Owen,Paton Robert,Tang Maria,Ward Tom,Wilkinson JackORCID,Woodrow-Hill Camilla,Aldridge Timothy,Chen YiqunORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesTo identify risk factors that contribute to outbreaks of COVID-19 in the workplace and quantify their effect on outbreak risk.MethodsWe identified outbreaks of COVID-19 cases in the workplace and investigated the characteristics of the individuals, the workplaces, the areas they work and the mode of commute to work, through data linkages based on Middle Layer Super Output Areas in England between 20 June 2021 and 20 February 2022. We estimated population-level associations between potential risk factors and workplace outbreaks, adjusting for plausible confounders identified using a directed acyclic graph.ResultsFor most industries, increased physical proximity in the workplace was associated with increased risk of COVID-19 outbreaks, while increased vaccination was associated with reduced risk. Employee demographic risk factors varied across industry, but for the majority of industries, a higher proportion of black/African/Caribbean ethnicities and living in deprived areas, was associated with increased outbreak risk. A higher proportion of employees in the 60–64 age group was associated with reduced outbreak risk. There were significant associations between gender, work commute modes and staff contract type with outbreak risk, but these were highly variable across industries.ConclusionsThis study has used novel national data linkages to identify potential risk factors of workplace COVID-19 outbreaks, including possible protective effects of vaccination and increased physical distance at work. The same methodological approach can be applied to wider occupational and environmental health research.

Funder

UK HM Government

Publisher

BMJ

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